0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:57
Pneumothorax 1187
Signs & Symptoms
■Ipsilateral pleuritic chest pain, acute dyspnea, tachycardia, cough
■Primary spontaneous ptx usually occurs at rest; strenuous activity
associated with∼20% of cases
■Small ptx (<15% hemithorax) may yield normal exam
■Larger ptx (>15% hemithorax): tachypnea, splinting, decreased chest
wall movement, hyperresonance, decreased fremitus, decreased or
absent breath sounds on affected side
tests
Imaging
■upright PA CXR: thin visceral pleural line
■expiratory film can uncover small apical ptx
■Chest CT: to distinguish large bullae from ptx; shows subpleural blebs
and underlying lung disease
■ECG: decreased QRS in limb leads, decreased precordial R wave;
inverted T waves with L sided ptx
■ABG: increased A-a gradient, acute respiratory alkalosis; hypoxemia
and hypercapnia in patients with underlying lung disease.
differential diagnosis
■PA CXR often confirms diagnosis. Giant bullae may mimic ptx on
CXR; obtain chest CT for confirmation
management
What to Do First
■R/o tension ptx
■treat hypoxemia and continue Rx of any underlying lung disease
General Measures
■history and physical to r/o underlying lung disease
■Encourage smoking cessation
specific therapy
■Observation – for young healthy patients with small primary sponta-
neous ptx, no SOB, and no hemodynamic instability; hospitalization
not required.
■Oxygen – accelerates rate of reabsorption 4-fold; administer to all
hospitalized patients.
■Needle aspiration – recommended for first large (>15% hemithorax)
primary spontaneous ptx; success rate∼70%; not for recurrent pri-
mary or secondary ptx (success rate only∼30%)